Schwanzer has repurposed the typewriter to automatically type tweets sent using the Faire’s hashtag, #mmfto.

Schwanzer said the project unites “the online world with the offline world,” and it’s just one of many fascinating technological creations on display this weekend.

Hundreds of people crowded inside the Wychwood community centre, clamouring to get the chance to print using the inevitably popular chocolate 3D printer, one of dozens of 3D printers at the event, or learn how to solder or even pick locks.

Advertised as the “Greatest Show and Tell on Earth,” a Maker Faire like Toronto’s stems from the so-called Maker movement, which prides itself on bringing the ability to make “things” — especially advanced things like electronics — to the masses.

Maker Faires have been held around the world, including San Francisco.

The Faire is “where people show what they are making, share what they are learning, and come play with robots, 3D printing, laser cutting and more,” reads the Toronto event’s website.

Saturday was largely a family affair, as kids scuttled from table to table, begging their parents for the Faire’s main food draw: ice cream made with liquid nitrogen.

Many spent the day at the “toy hacking” tables, where kids can take apart old toys using screwdrivers, hacksaws, drills and so on — safety was assured — and then glue, duct tape and sew new creations together, reminiscent of Sid’s reconstructions in Toy Story 2.